Cavendish claims stage, but not lead

STAGE IS SET:The British rider took advantage of a crash to sprint to a sixth-stage win, while Contador did enough to keep his overall lead heading into the race’s final stage

AFP, MILAN

The UK’s Mark Cavendish of Omega Pharma Quick-Step on Monday wins the sixth stage of the Tirreno-Adriatico from Bucchianico to Porto Sant’Elpidio, Italy.

Photo: EPA

Tour de France sprint king Mark Cavendish cruised to victory in the sixth and penultimate stage of the Tirreno-Adriatico on Monday, with Spaniard Alberto Contador retaining the overall lead.

Following a crash in the final bend caused by a Lampre-Merida rider and which took down another from the Lotto Belisol Team, Cavendish went on to surge from behind the wheels of three Omega Pharma-Quick Step teammates in the final 150m of the 189km stage from Bucchianico to Porto Sant’Elpidio in Italy to win solo.

Less than a week from the season’s first major one-day classic — the Milan-San Remo — Cavendish said he was delighted with the form that has seen him win one stage on the Tour of the Algarve, as well as his victory on Monday.

“I’m really happy because I’m in great shape. I can’t wait for Milan-SanRemo,” the Isle of Man rider told Rai television.

Earlier, Sagan’s Cannondale Pro Cycling Team upped the pace when it became clear that sprint rival Marcel Kittel was struggling on one of several climbs.

In the closing kilometers, Philippe Gilbert pulled clear of the peloton after it had caught an earlier four-man breakaway.

However, the Belgian, who will also fancy his chances in San Remo on Sunday, was reeled in as Omega-Pharma upped the pace for the final dash for the line.

A right-hand bend proved fatal for the sprinters looking to prevail on the long home straight, with Germany’s Andre Greipel one of several caught up in the ensuing melee.

It left a small group of riders to go on and contest the win, but with three teammates pacing him in furious fashion in the finale, there was little chance of Cavendish facing an upset.

Contador, who claimed the overall lead by winning stage five, still leads Nairo Quintana by 2 minutes, 8 seconds in the overall standings ahead of yesterday’s final stage, a 9.1km time trial.

Philippe Mauduit, the Spaniard’s sporting director at Tinkoff-Saxo, said that: “It was a perfect scenario for us. We were hoping that the sprinter teams would take the reigns of the pack and as Kittel was dropped, they were all eager to work in the front so we didn’t have to.”

“Now, we’re only one stage away from the overall win and, let’s face it, it looks pretty promising with a two-minute lead to Quintana, but history shows that many unforeseen things can happen during a time trial and we’re not celebrating until Alberto crosses the finish line tomorrow,” Mauduit added.

This story has been viewed 1133 times.

Comments will be moderated. Remarks containing abusive and obscene language, personal attacks of any kind or promotion will be removed and the user banned.